Ir al contenido

The Great Mirror of Male Love
Foto de archivo: la portada puede ser diferente

The Great Mirror of Male Love Tapa dura - 1990

de Saikaku, Ihara


Información de la editorial

The first complete translation of Nanshoku okagami by Ihara Saikaku (1642-93), this is a collection of 40 stories describing homosexual love affairs between samurai men and boys and between young kabuki actors and their middle-class patrons. Seventeenth-century Kyoto was the center of a flourishing publishing industry, and for the first time in Japan's history it became possible for writers to live exclusively on their earnings. Saikaku was the first to actually do so. As a popular writer, Saikaku wanted to entertain his readership. When he undertook the writing of Nanshoku okagami in 1687, it was with the express purpose of extending his readership and satisfying his ambition to be published in the three major cities of his day, Kyoto, Osaka, and Edo. He chose the topic of male homosexual love because it had the broadest appeal both to the samurai men of Edo and to the townsmen of Kyoto and Osaka, his regular audience. Homosexual relations between a man and a boy were a regular feature of premodern Japanese culture and carried no stigma. When a boy reached the age of nineteen, he underwent a coming-of-age ceremony, after which he took the adult role in relations with boys."

Detalles

  • Título The Great Mirror of Male Love
  • Autor Saikaku, Ihara
  • Encuadernación Tapa dura
  • Edición 1st Edition
  • Páginas 384 pages
  • Editorial Stanford University Press, Stanford
  • Fecha de publicación 1990
  • ISBN 9780804716611